Gym Library

Learn the Concepts

Browse short, clear explanations for every geometry concept in the gym. Read before you train, or look something up when you get stuck.

29 concepts · 55 min total

Foundations2 min

What Is an Angle?

An angle is formed when two rays meet at a shared endpoint called the vertex. Think of it like two arms stretching out from the same shoulder.

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Foundations2 min

Types of Angles

Angles are grouped by their size. Knowing the names makes it faster to describe and reason about shapes.

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Foundations1 min

Complementary Angles

Two angles are complementary when they add up to exactly 90°. Together they form one right angle.

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Foundations1 min

Supplementary Angles

Two angles are supplementary when they add up to exactly 180°. Together they form a straight line.

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Foundations2 min

Vertical Angles

When two straight lines cross, they form four angles. The angles directly across from each other are called vertical angles.

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Foundations2 min

Parallel & Perpendicular Lines

Parallel lines never meet. No matter how far you extend them, they stay the same distance apart — like train tracks running off into the horizon.

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Shape & Form2 min

What Is a Polygon?

A polygon is a closed, flat shape with straight sides. "Closed" means the sides connect all the way around — no gaps or open ends.

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Shape & Form2 min

Types of Triangles

Every triangle has 3 sides and 3 angles that always sum to 180°. But within that rule, triangles come in several flavours.

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Shape & Form2 min

Quadrilaterals

A quadrilateral is any polygon with four sides. The four angles always add up to 360°.

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Shape & Form2 min

Interior Angles of Polygons

The interior angles of any polygon always add up to the same total, and it depends only on the number of sides.

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Shape & Form2 min

Symmetry

A shape has line symmetry (or reflective symmetry) when you can fold it along a line and both halves match exactly. That fold line is called the axis of symmetry or mirror line.

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The Measurement Room2 min

Area vs Perimeter

Perimeter is the distance around the outside of a shape. You measure it by adding up all the side lengths. The result is in regular units — centimetres, metres, inches.

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The Measurement Room1 min

Area & Perimeter of Rectangles

For a rectangle with length l and width w: Perimeter = 2l + 2w. Area = l × w.

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The Measurement Room2 min

Area of a Triangle

The area of a triangle is ½ × base × height.

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The Measurement Room2 min

Circles: Area & Circumference

Every circle has a radius (r) — the distance from the centre to the edge — and a diameter (d = 2r) — the distance all the way across.

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Heavy Lifts2 min

Volume vs Surface Area

Volume measures how much space is inside a 3D object — how much it can hold. Measured in cubic units: cm³, m³.

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Heavy Lifts2 min

Rectangular Prisms & Cubes

A rectangular prism (cuboid) has six rectangular faces. Volume = length × width × height. Surface area = 2(lw + lh + wh) — two of each pair of opposite faces.

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Heavy Lifts2 min

Cylinders

A cylinder has two circular ends and a curved side. Volume = πr²h — the area of the circular base multiplied by the height.

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Heavy Lifts2 min

Nets of 3D Shapes

A net is what a 3D shape looks like when completely unfolded and laid flat. Every face of the shape appears as a flat polygon in the net.

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The Track2 min

The Coordinate Plane

The coordinate plane is a flat grid made by two number lines crossing at right angles. The horizontal line is the x-axis, the vertical line is the y-axis. They cross at the origin: (0, 0).

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The Track2 min

The Four Quadrants

The x and y axes divide the coordinate plane into four sections called quadrants, numbered I through IV going counter-clockwise from the top right.

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The Track2 min

Translations

A translation slides every point of a shape the same distance in the same direction. The shape doesn't rotate, flip, or resize — it just moves.

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The Track2 min

Reflections

A reflection flips a shape over a mirror line. Every point lands on the opposite side of the line, the same distance away.

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The Track2 min

Rotations

A rotation turns every point of a shape around a fixed centre point by a given angle. The size and shape stay the same, just the orientation changes.

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Power Movement2 min

The Pythagorean Theorem

In any right triangle, the square of the hypotenuse equals the sum of the squares of the other two sides: a² + b² = c².

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Power Movement2 min

Pythagorean Triples

A Pythagorean triple is a set of three whole numbers that satisfy a² + b² = c². They produce right triangles with no messy decimals.

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Power Movement2 min

Finding Missing Sides

The Pythagorean theorem can find any missing side of a right triangle, as long as you know the other two.

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Power Movement2 min

Congruence

Two shapes are congruent if they are exactly the same size and shape. One can be moved, rotated, or reflected to fit perfectly on top of the other — no resizing allowed.

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Power Movement2 min

Similarity

Two shapes are similar if they have the same shape but can be different sizes. Their angles are all equal and their sides are proportional.

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